It fails to recognize the card. 
cardctl status returns Socket 0:
                       3.3V 16-bit PC Card
                       function 0: [busy]

cardctl ident returns  not product info available

if I do a cardctl eject and then an insert I get:
cs: socket c0268800 timed out during reset. 

I have to physically remove and reinsert the card then it is fine.

Dan

> -----Original Message-----
> From: John Dorsey [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2001 9:03 PM
> To: Danny Maupin
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: PCMCIA NIC PROBLEM
> 
> 
> 
> On Thursday, April 19, 2001, at 03:32 PM, Danny Maupin wrote:
> 
> > When the kernel boots, it does not always recognize the card and will 
> > not
> > load the drivers.
> 
> Does it fail to _detect_ the card, or does it simply not _recognize_ 
> it? (`cardctl status` and `cardctl ident` should help to answer this 
> question.)
> 
> 
> > If I physically eject and re-insert the card all is well.
> 
> Does `cardctl insert` accomplish the same result?
> 
> (The question I really mean to ask is, "is this a botched card detect 
> initialization/interrupt problem, or an attribute memory access 
> problem?")
> 
> 
> > I have also had a problem where it will recognize the card and load the
> > drivers, but all the packets are errored.
> 
> (Please forgive me for asking such dull questions, but recently there 
> have been reports of PCMCIA strangeness on the iPAQ that I am utterly 
> unable to reproduce on any of the four different SA-1110 designs 
> available to me. I'm just trying to gather information.)
> 
> Do you trust your PCMCIA (hardware) implementation? (i.e., does it work 
> flawlessly using some other software environment?)
> 
> If your PCMCIA implementation was derived from Assabet or Neponset, have 
> you seen the post on this mailing list (or maybe it was l-a-k) regarding 
> the excessive pullup resistance on some of the signals from those 
> designs?
> 
> Have you ever attempted to run some earlier Linux kernel version (than 
> 2.4.2) on this hardware?
> 
> (Your Socket card is the one which was used to develop the post-Itsy 
> Card Services port; it _will_ work. We'll get you sorted. =)
> 
> -jd
> 

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